Every purpose of popular control might be combined with every advantage of vesting the immediate choice of advisers in the Crown, were the Colonial Governor to be instructed to secure the cooperation of the Assembly in his policy by entrusting its administration... The Canadian Historical Review - Page 3341922Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| 1839 - 630 pages
...unimpaired, and even re-invigorated by wholesome reform ; but by instructing the colonral governor "'to secure the cooperation of the Assembly in' his...administration to such men as could command a majority/' — in other words, by transferring to the colonies the principle and practice which alone insure harmony... | |
| 1839 - 622 pages
...animpaired, and even re-invigorated by wholesome reform ; but by instructing the colonial governor " to secure the cooperation of the Assembly in his policy,...administration to such men as could command a majority," — in other words, by transferring to the colonies the principle and practice which alone insure harmony... | |
| George Bowyer - 1841 - 742 pages
...which have always sufficed to attain the end in the mother-country."1 He urged that the governor should be instructed to secure the co-operation of the assembly in his policy, by entrusting it to such men as could command a majority; that it should be made necessary for the official acts... | |
| George Bowyer - 1854 - 424 pages
...which have always sufficed to attain the end in the mother country." He urged that the governor should be instructed to secure the co-operation of the assembly in his policy, by entrusting it to such men as could command a majority in the assembly or colonial parliament, and that it should... | |
| William Kingsford - 1898 - 2550 pages
...body, it must consent to carry it on by means of those in whom that representative body has confidence Every purpose of popular control might be combined...co-operation of the assembly in his policy, by entrusting its adminAlthough the dissemination of this report must have made apparent that the old system was doomed,... | |
| William Houston - 1891 - 370 pages
...authority of the Crown, deprive the community of one of the great advantages of an hereditary monarchy. Every purpose of popular control *• might be combined...the Colonial Governor to be instructed to secure the co- >ixiration of the Assembly in his policy, by intrusting its administration to such men as could... | |
| William Henry Parr Greswell - 1898 - 266 pages
...the Crown. The way out of the constitutional deadlock was not difficult. Lord Durham pointed out that every purpose of popular control might be combined...advisers in the Crown, were the Colonial Governor instructed to secure the co-operation of the Assembly by entrusting its administration only to those... | |
| Edward Potts Cheyney - 1908 - 830 pages
...indications of a want of confidence, which have always sufficed to attain the end in the mother country. Every purpose of popular control might be combined...the cooperation of the assembly in his policy, by. intrust- The means ine its administration to such men as could command a ma- by which s* 1 'jority;... | |
| G.A. Natesan - 1918 - 1034 pages
...Executive Council — an idea which has analogies in early English constitutional history, he wrote : — Every purpose of popular control might be combined...the colonial Governor to be instructed to secure the corporation of the Assembly in his policy by entrusting its administration to such men as could command... | |
| Hutton Webster - 1920 - 238 pages
...authority of the Crown, deprive the community of one of the great advantages of an hereditary monarchy. Every purpose of popular control might be combined...the immediate choice of advisers in the Crown, were *% colonial governor to be instructed to secure the cooperation of the assembly in his policy, by intrusting... | |
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